Boost Retail Sales with Store Signage

After a long, wet spring, are you hoping to re-energize your retail store’s sales this summer? If so, try these tactics for using signage to attract customers into your store and get them to spend, spend, spend.

Clean it up

Is your store’s main outdoor signage fresh, up-to-date and clean?

If your sign lights up, check to see that it’s working properly. Nothing turns potential customers off like a burned-out sign. It sends a signal that the owners simply don’t care.

Check it out

How does your store’s sign read from a distance? If your location has been up and running for a while, you may not have paid attention to how new businesses opening up nearby can steal the thunder from a sign that used to grab all the attention. Drive and walk by your location from all angles. Does your sign stand out from a distance, or do customers have to get right next to it to see it? By that point, it’s too late and they’ve already driven by.

Clarify,

Does your sign clearly signal what you sell?

It’s great to be clever, but if your store name alone doesn’t indicate your product mix, maybe you need a “sub-title” below your main sign. For example, a new business opened in my neighborhood. Based on its name, “The Joint,” I assumed it was a marijuana dispensary (legal here in California). Only when they put up a sub-title under their main sign, “Chiropractic Services,” did I stop and check it out.

Draw them in

If your retail store relies on foot traffic, try putting sandwich signs or chalkboard signs on the sidewalk or outside the door to highlight special events, sales and seasonal products.

Make sure you check with local or mall zoning ordinances first, so you don’t run afoul of any rules prohibiting signs that block exits or inhibit traffic

Work your windows

You don’t have to be the Man-hattan Macy’s location to wow customers with your store windows. Change them frequently with new displays to highlight seasonal merchandise or sales. Add signage to your windows to draw attention, but make sure it doesn’t block the view of the merchandise inside.

Remember the basics

Are your store’s hours of operation, phone number and website clearly displayed on the door? If customers stop by when you’re closed, providing this basic information can possibly ensure you still capture their business later on.

Identify aisles or displays with signage on shelves, hanging from the ceiling or even decals on the floors that direct them to “New Products,” “Gift Ideas,” “On Sale,” or “Clearance.” Try luring them through the whole store by putting sale items in the back so they have to walk past tempting displays of full-price merchandise to get to the deals.

Use images

Don’t limit your signage towords—images get attention too. Adding posters with eye-catching images and photos is an affordable way to change up in-store displays.

Have a banner season

Hanging vinyl banners on the front of your store is a great way to advertise seasonal events and sales without breaking the bank. Keep the wording general (“Spring Sale Now!”) instead of including specific dates or prices, and you’ll be able to re-use the banners every year.